Walt “Clyde” Frazier is courtside for another Knicks’ reset, just like he was for the one before that and the one before that and ….

Frazier has been a Knicks staple nearly every year since the team drafted him 50 years ago, whether it be on the court, where he led them to two titles in the early ’70s, or now alongside Mike Breen in one of his famous and audacious suits.

“It’s been a perfect marriage,” Frazier, who is now entering his 30th year calling games on radio then TV, told The Post. “We had that one breakup when they traded me [to the Cavaliers in 1977], but other than that it’s been a perfect marriage.

“I couldn’t think of anything better, so I am very grateful to the organization for keeping me around and I’ve never embarrassed them. I’ve never had anything negative going, and I am very cognizant of that wherever I go I am representing the New York Knicks. I am the New York Knicks. I always think of that.”

Frazier said he now thinks about taking a step back from his current role, in which he calls around 70-75 games in a season.

“I think sometimes about getting off the road, not doing so many road games and doing some studio,” the 72-year-old Hall of Famer said. “Or doing what [John] Starks and LJ [Larry Johnson] do and dealing with the fans. I can just periodically come and meet and greet people talking basketball. Hopefully I’ll still have my restaurant (Clyde Frazier’s Wine and Dine on 10th Avenue) going and the Knicks have been very supportive of that.”

Walt Frazier with the Knicks in 1974Getty Images

Talking to the prideful Frazier, you would not know of the franchise’s recent woes: the years of losing, the feud with Charles Oakley, Isiah Thomas’ sexual harassment trial and owner James Dolan’s fumbling of it all. Frazier wears his loyalty like a badge of honor.

“What a blessing. When I think I could have that type of longevity, been around for 50 years. It’s obviously something I never dreamt of, I never planned, it’s always been serendipity being in the right place at the right time, it’s very humbling,” said Frazier, whose next broadcast is Friday night when the Knicks play host to the Suns.

“That’s why you always see me smiling, taking pictures, doing autographs. It’s so weird when I’m at the games now I meet a lot of people that now know me as the Knicks announcer. They don’t even know as me as a ballplayer. It’s so funny.”

The Knicks began a new era this season without Phil Jackson and Carmelo Anthony and with a future dependent on the growth of budding star Kristaps Porzingis and rookie Frenchman Frank Ntilikina. The thought of this being a tank job, though, has taken a hit with the Knicks reeling off three straight wins before a loss Wednesday night to the Rockets dropped them to 3-4 start.

“Right away you’re noticing something is different with the team,” Frazier said. “The main thing is how freely the ball is moving. That’s no knock on Melo. Any team that has a superstar, the ball is stopping. Now you don’t hear anyone say the ball isn’t moving, whether they are winning or losing.

“Everyone is getting involved and that’s very noticeable early on. They are running and gunning. Every time you see them, [Jeff] Hornacek is telling them to push it. He wants them to run. Obviously that wasn’t the case with the triangle. It was more of a slowdown. He likes a more up-tempo style.”